The Maybrick diary was written on actual old paper, and if it was written with Diamine archive ink, that's an ink created from antique recipes and inferior to modern inks in a lot of ways. The fading was apparently faked by diluting the ink. Nonetheless it's hard to tell, which is why some bona fide experts judged it old.
Diamine told researchers to look for a preservative, which is apparently the only concession they made. I guess people were unhappy with mold growing on their pens. I'm told that once you get mold in a pen, you have to have a specialist clean it in an ultrasound machine with special disinfectant or else the mold will keep coming back. On the other hand, antique ink can ruin a pen in several other ways, so most of us pen fanciers shun it.
Nonetheless, I'd love to see the diary. The Victorians cared a lot more about handwriting than we do, and the diary succeeds as a work of fiction and a work of art. (Although I might be giving it too much credit here!)
(I just got a lovely WWII era Waterman pen back from the restorer today. Unlike most old Waterman's pens, it's plain dark plastic rather than their usual gaudy cellophane, which they couldn't get during the war. I think it's more beautiful than its more treasured siblings, and it's going to stay far away from antique ink--authenticity be damned! If I ever fake a diary I'll use a Chinese reproduction pen. )
Diamine told researchers to look for a preservative, which is apparently the only concession they made. I guess people were unhappy with mold growing on their pens. I'm told that once you get mold in a pen, you have to have a specialist clean it in an ultrasound machine with special disinfectant or else the mold will keep coming back. On the other hand, antique ink can ruin a pen in several other ways, so most of us pen fanciers shun it.
Nonetheless, I'd love to see the diary. The Victorians cared a lot more about handwriting than we do, and the diary succeeds as a work of fiction and a work of art. (Although I might be giving it too much credit here!)
(I just got a lovely WWII era Waterman pen back from the restorer today. Unlike most old Waterman's pens, it's plain dark plastic rather than their usual gaudy cellophane, which they couldn't get during the war. I think it's more beautiful than its more treasured siblings, and it's going to stay far away from antique ink--authenticity be damned! If I ever fake a diary I'll use a Chinese reproduction pen. )
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